Good news for those nature protectors who want to make their homes more ecological. Several states are beginning to promote renewable energy by passing laws that allow homeowners to overcome local opposition to use solar panels and wind turbines on their houses.
Since 2005, eight states have passed laws to abolish the
rules imposed by some homeowners associations and local agencies on residents
who wanted to make use of the sun’s and wind’s energy in producing power. Maryland
Gov. Martin O'Malley signed such a bill two weeks ago.
According to USA Today, states like
Matt Burdick, a homeowner from
Renewable-energy experts say that requests for homegrown renewable energy are on the rise as this would mean a cut in Americans’ utility bills. The biggest opposition comes mostly from local authorities who stand in the way by refusing to release the necessary permits, or by requesting high permit fees that homeowners can’t afford.
In response, some states enacted laws designed to protect
homeowners from restrictive neighborhood associations and local regulators.
About 250,000 of the 100-million-plus U.S. homes have solar panels for electricity or water heating, the Solar Energy Industries Association estimated, and US is the fourth on the list of nations that have installed the most solar-power technology, coming after Germany, Japan and Spain.